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 The dramatic debate between Senator Bernie Sanders and Hillary  Clinton in Brooklyn on April 14, in anticipation of the New York  primaries on April 19, notwithstanding, the national conversations about  the US presidential campaign has become positively predictable, if not  punishingly boring - except for the grassroots mobilisation it has  triggered that may one day change the shape of politics in this  country.  
  
Today, I think of the possibility of "democracy" in the US in  exactly the way Gandhi is reported to have thought of "Western  civilisation": It would be a great idea. 
  
    
        
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             US elections 2016: Democrat Sanders visits the Vatican 
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On the Republican front, Ted Cruz and Donald Trump are  clean-shaven prehistoric cave-dwellers in business suits, while Hillary  Clinton on the Democratic front is the dictionary definition of a  chameleon - like a corrupt politician changing colour depending on which  way the political wind blows but consistently representing mega-donors,  big banks, and Super PACs without any moral scruples, while feigning  that she cares about the poor and the disenfranchised. 
  
Aspirations of decent Americans
  
In this presidential campaign, Bernie Sanders is the closest  candidate to the aspirations of millions of decent Americans dreaming of  a better future for their children while refusing to lend their name to  an imperial republic that systematically arms the rich tyrants around  the world, supports Israel stealing Palestine and murdering Palestinians  one settlement at a time, and helps to create monstrosities such as  ISIL. 
Come April 19 New York primary, like millions of other New Yorkers, I  intend to exercise my very fragile rights as a US citizen and go and  vote for Bernie Sanders, doing my share and hoping he will beat Clinton  and win the Democratic nomination. 
I do so without any illusion that Bernie Sanders can alter the  imperial DNA of this country, or that I am particularly enamoured by  this liberal Zionist beating on the dead horse of a "two-state"  delusion.   
I intend to vote for Bernie Sanders conscious of a crucial  development in the US Muslim community. This year is the first time that  I will vote in a presidential election conscious of being a Muslim, and  that consciousness is a significant event in the make-up of the US  Muslim community at a time of intense Islamophobia.    
  
I will not be the first nor the only Muslim voting for Sanders  in the US. The fact that US Muslims are significantly siding with  Senator Sanders has already made major headlines in the US.  
  
There is, in fact, an entire Facebook page  dedicated to "Muslims for Bernie Sanders 2016". Leading Muslim scholars  and intellectuals like Zareena Grewal and Donna Auston have also written eloquently as to "Why Muslim Americans should vote for Bernie Sanders".  
  
Reports indicate that  "in less than three weeks, Bernie Sanders, being a friend of the Arab  and Muslim American communities, has become legendary, and the support  from this community of Sanders voters has been growing online since his  March 8 victory in Michigan." 
  
  
The significance of US Muslims rallying behind  Sanders as "the only Jewish candidate" should neither be exaggerated nor  misinterpreted. This is a crucial development, but we need to know  why.  
  
Above all, this vote signifies the rise of Muslims as a  self-conscious, engaged, and assertive community with pronounced  political views. To be sure, this does not mean all Muslims are for  Sanders. There are plenty of rich and powerful Muslims of all sorts, no  doubt, rooting for Hillary Clinton or even voting Republican. The very idea of a "Muslim vote" is as flawed and misleading as that of "the Jewish vote", or "Christian vote".  
  
The making of a Muslim community
  
Many Muslims would have sided with and voted for Bernie Sanders  even if he were not Jewish. That he is a proud and progressive Jew from  a poor immigrant background links him to the deepest layers of Jewish  prophetic voices throughout the ages as well as to the Jewish  intellectuals and activists vastly involved with the Civil Rights  Movement in the US as he, in fact, exemplifies a particularly proud  moment for Jewish Americans that Muslims must learn and update. 
The formation of this crucial political consciousness signals a  historic formation that could and should bring Muslims into the  forefront of a national awakening in active alliance with such crucial  segments of US society as the budding Jewish liberation theology of a  post-Zionist era, the Occupy Wall Street uprising, the Black Lives  Matter movement, and even the nascent Democracy Spring rallies.   
Sanders is a significant catalyst in this historic moment,  bringing significant layers of political consciousness in the US to the  forefront of the US presidential election. His supporters are putting up  a heroic effort to promote their preferred presidential candidate.  These forces, however, must begin to think of the day after a dreadful  Clinton nomination, and what would happen to the significant momentum  that Sanders’ campaign has generated.  
  
In the formation of that momentum, I believe, Muslims have a  significant role to play, not just as Muslims, but more importantly as a  momentous gathering integral to progressive fronts joining ranks with  equally committed segments of society determined to change the landscape  of US politics with wide-ranging global consequences. 
  
Hamid Dabashi is Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.  |